WHAP Review #1
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Transcript WHAP Review #1
WHAP Review #1
Time Period 1 and 2
Foundations Period:
8,000 BCE – 600 BCE
600 BCE – 600 CE
Nomads: Follow the Food
Foragers: Hunt &
Gather
Tied to nature
Few possessions
Egalitarian nature
Pastoralists:
Domestication of
Animals
Mtns./low rainfall
areas
Male-dominated
Stratified as size of
herds grew
Leads to…
The Neolithic Revolution:
8000-3000 BCE
Agriculturalists: Plant
Domestication
Agricultural Surplus
Permanent
settlements
Idea of land
ownership: World
View Shift
MORE PATRIARCHY
Consequences of a Food Surplus
Specialization of labor
Improved technology: metal working, irrigation
Stratification of society
Possessions
Armies
Religion
Writing
Government
Population density increases
Voila!…Civilization
Environmental Impact
Use of water
resources
Clearing of land
Erosion
Deforestation
Animals & people
living together =
disease
Mining
River Valley Civs
Mesopotamia
– Tigris, Euphrates =
Fertile Crescent
– Sumer, Babylon
– Unpredictable
flooding
– Open geography
Sumer: The First Civilization
Successful
agriculture, river
management
Writing (cuneiform)
Use of wheel
12 month calendar, base 60,
geometry
Polytheistic
Ziggurats
Ur, Uruk; 3000 BCE
Walk Like an Egyptian
Rich soil, gentle flooding
•3 Kingdoms
•water management, pyramids,
astronomy, hieroglyphs, calendar,
gold, spices
•Polytheistic
•Women ruler = Hapshepsut, buy,
sell property, inherit, will property,
dissolve marriages, still
subservient to men
• Hierarchy: pharaoh, priest,
nobles, merchants, artisans,
peasants, slaves
Indus Valley
Indus Valley: 2500-1500 BCE
Connected
with Mespotamia via
trade
Harrappa, Mohenjo-Daro 100,000+
each
Master-planned, water system,
strong central gov’t, polytheistic,
written language
Pottery, cotton, cloth
Cities abandoned, reason unknown
Aryans arrive 1700 BCE
Aryans
From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea
Nomads who settled
Vedas, Upanashads basis for Hinduism
Caste system
warriors, priests, peasants
later re-ordered: Brahmins (priests),
warriors, landowners-merchants,
peasants, untouchables (out castes)
China: Shang on the Hwang
Shang: 1600-1100 BCE
N.
China, walled cities, strong army,
chariots
“The Middle Kingdom” World View
Bronze = power, pottery, silk,,
calendar
Patriarchal, ancestors as advocates
w/the gods
Character writing; ancestor
veneration, Oracle bones
It’s Zhou Time
Replaced
Shang around 1100 BCE
Ruled 900 years, kept customs,
traditions of Shang
Developed political ideology of
Mandate of Heaven
Feudal system, nobles gained power,
war amongst feudal kingdoms,
collapse 256 BCE
Led to the Warring States Period
Exceptions to the Rule
Olmecs (Mexico), Chavin (Andes)
developed similarly to others: urban,
polytheistic, irrigation, calendar,
monumental building
The point: Similar pattern of development
in different part of earth, no contact
The difference: Not River Valley Civs. Only
Olmecs had writing; Chavin used quipu
Americas = CULTURALLY NOT
POLITICALLY UNIFIED
Persia: 1st Empire
Multi-cultural
Empire, Tolerance
Run by local governors (satraps)
By 500 BCE Nile to Turkey/Greece to
Afghanistan
Great Royal Road, 1700 miles
Zoroastrian – links to monotheistic
religions (judgment day, God v. Satan set
up)
Smaller Civs co-existed
– Lydians-coined money
– Phoenicians-22-letter alphabet, naval power
– Hebrews-Judaism, monotheism
The Classical Period Empires:
India & China
4
key empires 300 BCE-500 CE
India
– Maurya
– Gupta
China
– Q’in
– Han
Mauryan Empire 321-180 BCE
Mauryan Empire
Founded
by Chandragupta Maurya
– Unified smaller Hindu kingdoms
Greatest
extent under Ashoka who
sponsored BUDDHISM
Big time traders: silk, cotton,
elephants (much more) to the west
Strong military
Ashoka’s Rock & Pillar edicts,
Buddhism spread
Gupta Dynasty 320-467 CE
Rise of Gupta
Ashoka dies 232 BCE, Mauryan’s rapidly
decline
400s to 600 CE, revival of empire but
REASSERTED HINDUISM as primary
religion
Smaller, more decentralized: Golden Age
of culture & learning
Arts & Sciences; pi, zero
Hinduism resurgent – spreads to S.E. Asia
Women lost rights b/c of shift away from
Buddhism; child marriages common & Sati
(widow-burning) encouraged
Qin Empire
Q’in Ups in China 221-209 BCE
strong agri-econ, strong army, iron,
expansion…only lasted 15 years
GREAT WALL…so what?
– Strong centralized, brutal gov’t
– Qin Shihuangdi emperor
– Unified kingdom, standardized
weights, measures, laws, written
lang, patriarchal
– Legalism
– Peasant rebellion brings down 209
BCE
A big hand for the Han!
Han Dynasty 200 BCE-200 CE
Strength decreases power of pastoralists
to interfere
Expanded into Central Asia
Silk Road to the Mediterranean
Buddhism spread at END of Empire
Civil Service system, bureaucracies,
resulting in stable gov’t.
sundials, calendars, metallurgy
Confucianism = awesome
Mandate of Heaven
Yellow Turban Rebellion of peasant at end
& Wang Mang’s Reforms indicate
weakness at end
Classical Civs in the Med
It’s Greek to me!
Impact of
geography =
Trade, not
agriculture
Est. colonies
Governance in new
ways
The Polis
City-states
UNIFED
CULTURAL identity, culture
in each but politically DISUNIFIED
Athens
– Political, commercial, cultural center
Sparta
– militaristic, equality w/o individuality
Hierarchy
Citizens-adult males w/ property born in
Athens
Free people w/ no political rights
Non-citizens (included slaves 1/3 of the
Athenian pop!)
All citizens expected to participate in
public life
Monarchy to aristocracy to democracy
Solon/Draco: aristocrats who worked to
ensure fair, =, open participation
Religion
Polytheistic
Had
human failings: got drunk,
cheated on spouses, jealous, angry,
took sides, etc.
Greek mythology remains a large
part of Western heritage and
language
War with Persia
Persia
invades Greece twice. Despite
great odds, Greece survives. Key
battles: Marathon 490 BCE (land),
Salamis 480 BCE (sea)
Greece controls Aegean
Period of peace and prosperity
Golden Age of Pericles
Athenian
culture excels
Democracy for all adult males
(citizens)
Delian League-city-state alliance
Socrates, Plato, Aristotle
– Truth through rational thought and
observation
Math,
Science, Architecture,
Literature
Super-power, super mistake
Athens
dominated the Delian League
Peloponnesian War with Sparta (431
BCE)
Weakened, Macedonian conquest
Philip encouraged Greek culture
Followed by son, Alexander, unified
Greece, invaded Persia
Alexander the Great?
Live fast, die young…
Alexander
conquered Persia
Pushed to Egypt
Stopped at India
Empire divided into three:
– Antigonid (Greece/Macedonia)
– Ptolemaic (Egypt),
– Seleucid (Bactria/Anatolia)
Hellenistic Era
Greek
Culture and ideas flourished
and spread
Alexandria (Egypt) became wealthy,
center for learning
After death (323 BCE), empire
crumbled
Macedonian focus on the east and
Egypt left the door open for…
The Romans: 509 BCE-476 CE
Rome
Good
Geographic position
– Protected by mtns in north
– Peninsula
– Cross-roads in the Mediterranean
Polytheistic,
borrowed many Greek
gods, mythology still evident in West
Social-Political Structure
Patricians
– Senate, Assembly
Plebians
– Non-aristocrats
Representative (as opposed to Direct in
Greece)
12 Tables = importance of Laws (innocent
until proven guilty)
Patriarchal/Paterfamilias
Women influential in family, own property,
still considered inferior
Slaves (up to 1/3) city better than country
Military Domination
All
Directions, all the time
Punic Wars 264-146 BCE
Gained control of W. Med
Defeated Macedonians
Gaul
Spain
Road net, navy, aqueducts
Cultural diffusion
Republic, no - Imperialism, yes
Increased slavery, displaced plebians,
inflation= social unrest
Senate weakened, Triumvirate, Caesar,
Pompey, Crassus = Civil War
Caesar assassinated 44 BCE
2nd Triumvirate, civil war
Octavian, I have a baby attached to my
Leg Augustus = Caesar (emperor)
Imperial Rome
Pax Romana
Pax Romana
Peace and Prosperity
Rome,
capital of western world
Military expansion
Rule of law, common coinage. Civil
service, secure travel for merchants
200 years of stability
Uniform laws, but traditional cultures
in territories survived ie Egyptians,
Hebrews
Growth of arts and sciences
A New Religion
Christianity
competes with
polytheism
Christians persecuted
Conversion of Constantine ended
persecution 312 CE
Edict of Milan-Christianity official
religion of Rome
“What goes up…”
Empires
fall
Late Classical Period 200-600 CE
Steppe People on the move,
dominoes fall
Han, Gupta, Roman Empires fall
Collapse of the Han
Social
– Rising tensions between rich and poor
– Poorly conceived land reform program
– Famine
– YELLOW TURBAN REVOLT
– Han Dynasty briefly restored, full
recovery impossible, collapse in 220 CE
– 400 years of regional kingdoms
Collapse of the Gupta
Huns
24/7
Gupta able to hold off for a while, at
great cost
Hun kingdoms emerged in western
& northern India
Culture survived, Hinduism, caste
system, Gupta Empire did not
“Western Rome, you are the
weakest link, good-bye”
284 CE, Diocletian
splits W-E Empire
Collapse
No
singular reason
Rome sacked 410 CE, 476 CE
Internal decay
– Weak or bad leaders
– Expense of empire
– Epidemics
External
pressures
– Huns, Visigoths
– Sheer size
Cultural Diffusion via the Silk Road
Ideas, Culture, Invention
Trade routes brought various peoples in
contact
Pastoralists provided protection, services,
supplies
Disease and armies also traveled the
routes, plague, small pox, Mongols
Religion-Buddhism to China, SE Asia
Christianity through Med, Europe, Britain
Peoples: Huns to India, Germanic Tribes
to Europe
Religion: to 600 CE
Belief Systems through 600 CE
Polytheism
Confucianism
Daoism
Legalism
Hinduism
Buddhism
Judaism
Christianity
Commonalities
Schisms-Divisions
resulting in
subgroups, sects
Spread through trade
Buddhism & Christianity = Universal
religions (all could join)
Women rose in Buddhism &
Christianity
Confucianism
Political-social
philosophy, not as
religion-y as most. (just expects you
to honor the gods, ancestors, etc)
Moral, ethical, also practical
How to restore political-social order?
= ethical behavior of the “superior
man” who leads society
Hierarchical – everyone know their
place
Confucianism
Right
relationships = right society
Put aside personal ambition for
good of state
Ren-humanity, benevolence, kindness
Xiao-filial
piety, family obligation,
extended
Lead by good example
Women, 2nd status
The Big Deal?
An
ethical, social, political belief
system – not so much religious
Embraced by leaders as well,
ordered society, tight families,
community harmony
Culturally specific; only works in
context of Asian culture
Daoism-Taoism
China
500 BCE onward
“The Way” (of nature/cosmos)
Lao-tzu, philosopher
Eternal principles, passive, yielding
– Like water, yet strong, shaping
– Opening of a pot, nothing, yet not a pot
without it
Wu
wei- going with the flow,
harmony with nature
The Big Deal?
Counter
to Confucian activism
Emphasis on harmony w/ nature:
Daoists focused on astronomy,
botany, chemistry
Contrast: Confucianism-Daoism
Shared belief in spirits of the dead
Confucianism
– creating orderly society
– active relationships, active gov’t
– To guide relationships
Daoism
–
–
–
–
harmony with nature, internal peace
Simple, passive life
Little gov’t interference
To guide individual in meditation
Legalsim
The
Q’in Dynasty
Peace & order through centralized,
tightly controlled state
Mistrust of human nature; reliance
on tough laws
Focus on things the practical and
sustainers of society
2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier
The Big Deal?
Accomplished
swift reunification of
China
Big, centralized projects like the
Great Wall
Caused widespread resentment
among common people, led to wider
acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism
Contrast: Confucianism-Legalism
Social
belief systems, not religions
Intended to create orderly society
Confucianism-fundamental goodness
– responsibilities
Legalism-fundamental
– punishments
evil
Hinduism
Aryans, and empires of Indian
subcontinent
Brahma-supreme force
– Gods are manifestations of Brahma
Vishnu-preserver
Shiva-destroyer
Reincarnation
– Dharma: rules and obligations
– Karma: fate based on how dharma was met
– Moshka: highest state of being, release of soul
The Big Deal?
Religion
as well as social system
Caste system, accept lot in life, next
one will be better (if dharma met)
Close relationship w/Indian culture,
caste system has limited its spread
Treatment of animals =
Hinduism spawns Buddhism
Buddhism
India,
China, SE Asia
Hindu prince, Siddartha Gautama
Nepal 563-483 BCE
Search for meaning of human
suffering
Buddha = enlightened one
No supreme being
Buddhism: 4 Noble Truths
Four
noble truths
– All Life is suffering
– Suffering caused by desire
– One can be freed of desire
– Freed by following Eightfold path
Buddhism: Eightfold Path
Eightfold Path
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
views
aspirations
speech
conduct
livelihood
endeavor
mindfulness
meditation
Following the path
– Leads to nirvana
– State of perfect peace &
harmony
– May take several
lifetimes
2 forms
– Theraveda: Buddha not a
god lots of monks
– Mahayana: more ritual,
reliance on priests.
Buddha a diety,
bodhisattvas, nirvana
“helpers”
The Big Deal?
Did not recognize castes
Appealed to lower classes (duh!)
Not attached to social structure, spread
rapidly to other cultures
Ashoka adopted, thrived
Eventually reabsorbed into Hinduism
Thrived in China, Japan, SE Asia
Force of cultural diffusion via trade,
missionaries; SYNCRETISM
Comparable to Christianity in saints,
missionaries, role of women
Judaism
The Hebrews
Chosen by God, special status
Personal relationship with God
Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy,
personal salvation
To honor, serve God, promote prophets,
maintain cultural identity
A religion & culture
The First Monotheistic Belief System:
– Christianity
– Islam
Compare: Confucianism, Hinduism,
Judaism
Seem
very different
– Confucianism, not a religion
– Hinduism, polytheistic
– Judaism, monotheistic
All
tied to the culture where the
came from, not evangelical,
converting others
Christianity
Splinter
group of Jews, quickly
spread throughout Roman Empire
Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish
prophecy
Devotion to God, love of fellow man
Jesus sent to redeem man from sin
Salvation by faith in divinity, death,
and resurrection of Jesus.
Crucified by Jewish leaders and
Roman gov’t 30 CE
The Big Deal
Emphasis on compassion, better life after
death; appealed to lower classes, women
By 300 CE, most influential in Med.
Region
Spread north and west throughout Europe
and into Central Asia & Ethiopia
Similar to Buddhism in many ways
Foundations: 3 Themes
Civilizations
– Patterns, developments
– Rise-fall of empires: why? consequences?
Sources of Change
– Trade
– Conquest
– Invention, innovation, adaptation; iron, wheel
Man vs. Nature
– Interaction? Role of geography? Attempts to
measure/control?
– Change from survival (physical needs) to
internal peace (spiritual needs)